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  1. Mar 19, 2018 · Journey’s End, as O’Casey saw it, was sickly, sentimental and “false”. The “yells of agony” had been “modulated down to a sweet pianissimo of middle-class pain”.

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  2. Essays and criticism on R. C. Sherriff's Journey's End - Further Critical Evaluation of the Work ... Lieutenant Osborne, the second in command, is the most stable of the five. A middle-aged ...

  3. 7 Journey’s End, dir. James Whale (Incorporated Stage Society, 1928). The play moved to the Savoy Theatre in 1929 where it was presented by Maurice Browne. Journey’s End, dir. Eric Thompson (69 Theatre Company, 1972). Journey’s End, dir. David Grindley (Act Productions and Shaftesbury Theatre, 2011). David

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  4. For many, Journey's End seemed to say the same thing, with the tragic death of Lieutenant Osborne, a father figure to the youths surrounding him; with Stanhope's alcoholism; and with the pathetic end of the boy-officer Raleigh, who had arrived at the Front with childish expectations of military glory. What is Cecil's flattering view of the play ...

  5. Essays and criticism on R. C. Sherriff's Journey's End - Critical Essays Select an area of the website to search Journey's End All Study Guides Homework Help Lesson Plans

  6. Feb 23, 2007 · By Ben Brantley. Feb. 23, 2007. The minutes contract and dilate, like wary eyes in shifting light, amid the time-bending silence that pervades the splendid revival of R. C. Sherriff’s “Journey ...

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  8. Journey's End is a 1928 dramatic play by English playwright R. C. Sherriff, set in the trenches near Saint-Quentin, Aisne, towards the end of the First World War.The story plays out in the officers' dugout of a British Army infantry company from 18 to 21 March 1918, providing a glimpse of the officers' lives in the last few days before Operation Michael.

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